Build professional video descriptions in seconds — customize every section, then copy & paste.
Your description will appear here. Enable Auto-generate to update as you type, or click Generate Description manually.
✅ Add your main keyword in the first 2 lines — they show before "Show more".
⏱ Timestamps starting at 0:00 activate YouTube chapter markers.
🏷 Use 3–5 hashtags max — YouTube ignores more than 15.
📏 Descriptions can hold up to 5,000 characters. Use them!
The YouTube Description Generator helps content creators build structured, professional video descriptions in seconds. Fill in your details section by section, toggle what you need, and hit Generate.
Step 1: Choose a template to pre-fill the sections.
Step 2: Toggle each section on/off and fill in your details.
Step 3: Enable Auto-generate to update live as you type, or click Generate Description manually.
Step 4: Copy or download. Your draft auto-saves and restores on your next visit.
YouTube allows up to 5,000 characters in a video description. However, only the first 150–200 characters are visible before the "Show more" button on desktop, and even fewer on mobile.
Best practice: put your primary keyword and a compelling hook in the first 1–2 sentences for maximum SEO impact. Use the remaining characters for timestamps, links, social handles, and hashtags.
YouTube officially recommends using 3 to 5 hashtags per video. Key rules:
Place hashtags at the very end of your description so they do not interrupt reading flow.
Yes — timestamps (chapters) improve SEO in several meaningful ways:
Always start your first timestamp at 0:00 — required for YouTube to activate the chapters feature.
Yes, affiliate links are allowed in YouTube descriptions. Two important rules apply:
Affiliate programs like Amazon Associates, ShareASale, and Impact all permit YouTube description links. Always check each program's specific terms.
A well-optimized YouTube description includes these elements in order:
Avoid keyword stuffing. YouTube favors natural language that matches actual viewer search intent.
Yes. YouTube uses the description as a text signal to understand your video's topic and match it to relevant searches. Key impacts:
The description is less influential than the title and tags, but especially valuable for long-tail keyword phrases that would be too verbose for a title.